27th July 2022
The State We’re In: Sex discriminatory nationality laws in Sub-Saharan Africa
10 min read
Despite Africa as a region being home to one of the most progressive women’s human rights instruments in the world, there are 16 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa where women are denied the right to confer their nationalities to their children and/or spouses on an equal basis with men, which leaves them and their families at grave risk of violations of human rights.
In addition to the well-documented negative impact on women and their families that sex-discriminatory nationality laws can have, including denying access to employment, or even causing statelessness, nationality laws sometimes reinforce sex-discriminatory provisions in other laws and uphold harmful practices. For example, in the nationality laws of Mauritius and Nigeria, the provisions related to registration of citizenship/renunciation of nationality consider a married girl of 16 to be “full age” even though “full age” is defined as 18 elsewhere in the nationality law. And a number of countries, including, for example, the Central African Republic and Cameroon, implicitly endorse child marriage by explicitly allowing a minor girl to retain her nationality at the time of marriage.
Regionally, there has been both progress and stalemate. In September 2015, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights adopted a new Protocol on the Right to a Nationality, but this still has yet to be finalized, endorsed and adopted by the African Union and opened to member states for signature and ratification.
Subregionally, in 2016 the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Parliamentary Forum adopted a Resolution on the Prevention of Statelessness and the Protection of Stateless Persons in the SADC Region, and in 2017, the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) adopted a Declaration on the Eradication of Statelessness, both of which call on member states to uphold equality nationality laws.
Nationally, in recent years – and even in just the two weeks since the publication of our updated report – we have seen good progress toward achieving gender equality in nationality laws in 20 countries around the world, with several of these in Sub-Saharan Africa, although there is still work to be done:
We are hopeful that, by 2030, the state we’re in will be one of equality under the law, safety, and security for all in the region. To achieve this, the governments of Sub-Saharan Africa should eliminate all forms of gender discrimination in nationality laws, including by revising them so that:
* Update – 10 February 2023:
Benin reformed its nationality law at the end of December 2022 so there is now complete equality.
4th July 2025
10 min read
“It still hurts”: Sudanese women speak out on FGM
3rd July 2025
10 min read
Connecticut misses clear opportunity to ban FGM/C within its state: We’re still advocating
30th June 2025
10 min read
The Supreme Court ruling in the Skrmetti case should have taken sex discrimination into account: 5 things to know